Northwest History. State History. Box 38. Universities and colleges.

Idaho Graduates
Find Positions
27 School of Mines Men Engaged In North and South America.
University of Idaho, Moscow, Feb. 27--More than 90 percent of the men who have graduated from the Idaho School of Mines in the last four years have assumed definite places in the mineral industry, according to the information compiled in the office of Dr. Francis A. Thomson, dean of the school.
Of the 30 who have graduated during that period all but three are engaged in some form of mining or mining engineering work. Eleven are occupied in actual mining, 10 are employed in the metallurgy industry, 4 are geologists and 2 are doing analytical work in mineralogy. Of the remaining three, one is studying law, one is in the mercantile business and the third, R.M. Westover, is deceased.
The call of the industry has taken the graduates to all parts of the western hemisphere. Their present locations follow:
Latin Countries Get Some.
Class of 1922-- J.B. Gowen Jr., geological staff, Anaconda Copper Mining Company, Butte; W.K. Horning, Denver Rock Drill company, Denver; R.L. Jordan, American Smelting and Refining company, Garfield, Utah; A.H. Knudson, Empire Furniture company, Spokane; H. McCallie, fuel, oil and asphalt department, Standard Oil company, San Francisco; George Smolak, student, Schenectady, N.Y.; Eugene Zanger, New York and Honduras Roasrio company, San Jnancito, Honduras.
Class of 1923-- W.H. Birchby, Coa Mineral Asarco, Parral, Chihuahua, Mexico; Robert M. Cummins, student, college of law, University of Idaho; Lynn F. Hersey, chief mining enginess, Pilares de Nicoario, Sonora, Mexico; Stanley McDougall, Kellogg; A.A. McLeod, Kamiah, Idaho; S.L. Sampson, Virginia City, Nev.; Arthur Sargent, Talache Mines company, Talache, Idaho; S.S. Sieffus, Northwest Magnesite, Chewelah.
Class of 1924-- George V. Larsen, Idaho Bureau of Mines and Geology, Moscow; H.L. Simon, Anaconda Copper Mining company, Great Falls, Mont.; John E. Sandbeck, International Smelting company, Tooele, Utah; P.J. Shenon, graduate student in geology, University of Minnesota.

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Idaho Graduates
Find Positions
27 School of Mines Men Engaged In North and South America.
University of Idaho, Moscow, Feb. 27--More than 90 percent of the men who have graduated from the Idaho School of Mines in the last four years have assumed definite places in the mineral industry, according to the information compiled in the office of Dr. Francis A. Thomson, dean of the school.
Of the 30 who have graduated during that period all but three are engaged in some form of mining or mining engineering work. Eleven are occupied in actual mining, 10 are employed in the metallurgy industry, 4 are geologists and 2 are doing analytical work in mineralogy. Of the remaining three, one is studying law, one is in the mercantile business and the third, R.M. Westover, is deceased.
The call of the industry has taken the graduates to all parts of the western hemisphere. Their present locations follow:
Latin Countries Get Some.
Class of 1922-- J.B. Gowen Jr., geological staff, Anaconda Copper Mining Company, Butte; W.K. Horning, Denver Rock Drill company, Denver; R.L. Jordan, American Smelting and Refining company, Garfield, Utah; A.H. Knudson, Empire Furniture company, Spokane; H. McCallie, fuel, oil and asphalt department, Standard Oil company, San Francisco; George Smolak, student, Schenectady, N.Y.; Eugene Zanger, New York and Honduras Roasrio company, San Jnancito, Honduras.
Class of 1923-- W.H. Birchby, Coa Mineral Asarco, Parral, Chihuahua, Mexico; Robert M. Cummins, student, college of law, University of Idaho; Lynn F. Hersey, chief mining enginess, Pilares de Nicoario, Sonora, Mexico; Stanley McDougall, Kellogg; A.A. McLeod, Kamiah, Idaho; S.L. Sampson, Virginia City, Nev.; Arthur Sargent, Talache Mines company, Talache, Idaho; S.S. Sieffus, Northwest Magnesite, Chewelah.
Class of 1924-- George V. Larsen, Idaho Bureau of Mines and Geology, Moscow; H.L. Simon, Anaconda Copper Mining company, Great Falls, Mont.; John E. Sandbeck, International Smelting company, Tooele, Utah; P.J. Shenon, graduate student in geology, University of Minnesota.